Construction Beauty Queen

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Authors: Sara Daniel

Tags: #category, #opposites attract, #love, #short romance, #debutante, #series, #sara daniel, #Contemporary, #small town, #Romance, #across the tracks, #baby on the doorstep, #entangled, #boss employee relationship, #quirky, #construction, #construction beauty queen, #bliss

BOOK: Construction Beauty Queen
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Construction Beauty Queen

Sara Daniel

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Copyright © 2012 by Sara Daniel. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.

Entangled Publishing, LLC

2614 South Timberline Road

Suite 109

Fort Collins, CO 80525

Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.

Edited by Stacy Abrams

Cover design by Jessica Cantor

ISBN 978-1-62266-988-2

Manufactured in the United States of America

First Edition August 2012

The author acknowledges the copyrighted or trademarked status and trademark owners of the following wordmarks mentioned in this work of fiction: Oldsmobile, Blazer, Sheetrock, Linoleum, Gatorade, Porsche, Band-Aid, Dumpster, Jell-O, Mercedes, Godiva, iPod, Crocs, Crock-Pot, Google, Barbie, NASCAR, Ralph Lauren, Laundromat.

To my parents, who gave me an inside look at what it takes to run a small-town business. Thanks for loving me despite my mysterious lack of a civil engineering gene. And for Grandma Bonnie: I have no doubt you’ll let me know if this meets with your approval.

Chapter One

The checkered destination flag on the GPS screen waved over the entrance to the most desolate trailer park Veronica Jamison had ever seen. She’d faithfully followed the disembodied direction voice for four hours from the only home she’d ever known, with her parents on Chicago’s North Shore, to the microscopic town of Kortville in central Illinois. But instead of depositing her on her grandfather’s doorstep, the GPS mocked her with its cheerful announcement that she had arrived at her destination.

A man who owned a seven-building distribution complex and had a sizeable investment in a construction company surely didn’t live in a dilapidated trailer with duct tape covering the crack in the front window and a partially depetaled sunflower pinwheel struggling to spin in the front lawn. Right?

Then again, Veronica knew nothing about her grandfather, except that he was her only hope for building a life where she used her hard-earned business degree to launch a career that incorporated her financial and leadership skills, instead of existing for cocktail parties that demanded nothing more than empty-headed smiles.

The door creaked on her ancient tank of a car as she stepped out. She didn’t think she’d ever get used to the sound, but it was the best she could afford after she’d made her choice and sold her sporty little car in order to pay off her student loans.

Veronica picked her way through the weeds and trash to the trailer’s front door and knocked. As she suspected, there was no answer. The place was clearly uninhabitable. In fact, it appeared to be the last one standing on the abandoned lot. She looked across the street and was greeted with a sign of civilization—a convenience store in the midst of being remodeled.

The gas pump nozzles were covered with plastic bags. Half the store sported peeling paint underneath a sagging banner announcing they were open despite the mess. The other half had new beige siding, but it was rectangular, windowless, and drab.

Veronica got back in the car and turned off the useless GPS. She was a small-town girl now—she could do things the small-town way. She’d ask at the convenience store if anyone knew her grandfather or could offer directions.

She drove across the street, parked, and walked to the glass doors propped open by two cases of beer. She tugged her denim blazer around her and continued inside.

Dust swirled in the air. Behind the counter, a man held a gray-white panel against the open framework of an inside wall. His white T-shirt stretched tight across his back as he pounded nails into the panel.

Her skin tingled with excitement. Grandfather’s offer was for her to work for his construction firm for thirty days before she took over running the distribution company he owned. And already she’d spotted an opportunity to take on a construction job. This man could hire her to remodel his store so he could focus on running his business. Windows, some pretty wooden-lattice trim on the outside, and white, lacy curtains inside would create an inviting ambiance.

She watched, trancelike, as the man’s forearms flexed. If his biceps were any indication, he knew what he was doing with a hammer. Which, unfortunately, was more than she could say for herself. Luckily, she’d been studying her
Do-It-Yourself Home Improvement Manual
, so she wasn’t completely clueless about what she was getting into.

“Can I help you?” Apparently at some point while she’d been ogling, he’d stopped pounding and turned toward her. His cinnamon-brown eyes locked on hers, and he hooked his hammer into the side of his tool belt.

Veronica never realized she had a weakness for a man in a tool belt. But wow, she’d have to be dead not to. She gulped and dragged her eyes back up to his attractively scruffy face, which added to the proof she was plenty weak but far from dead. “I hope so. I’m lost and in need of directions.”

“To the interstate?”

“No, that I could find.” She looked away from the golden flecks in the man’s eyes and landed on his tough-guy chin just begging to be caressed. She had to focus. She was done being arm candy. “I’m looking for a man by the name of Ron Walker. I thought the address he gave me was for his house, but it led me to that trailer across the street.”

The guy’s grin was slow and lazy. “Ron definitely doesn’t live there. In a few more weeks, that trailer will be gone, and the lot will be a baseball field.”

“So you know Ron?” Veronica curled her toes inside her black, ankle-high boots, trying to ignore the awareness that fairly crackled around them and instead to concentrate on the helpful information he could provide. “This is great. I knew I was going to love small-town life.”

“You’re staying here?” He seemed surprised.

“Absolutely. I’m Veronica Jamison, Ron’s granddaughter. He invited me to live with him.” She smiled widely and held out her right hand, looking forward to the feel of his big workman’s palm engulfing it in a shake.

“Matt Shaw.” He took her hand but didn’t hold it long, as if he didn’t quite trust her. “What do you plan to do while you’re here?”

“I’ll be running his distribution warehouse eventually, but first I’m going to work for this construction company he has an investment in—Kortville Construction. I don’t know if you’ve heard of it.”

“Oh…I’ve heard of it.” His voice sounded strangled.

“Are you okay?” Veronica took a step toward him.

“I’ll call Ron and let him know you’re here.” Matt grabbed his cell phone off his tool belt and stalked out of the store.


She misinterpreted my offer. Send her over, and I’ll set her straight.
Those were the words Matt imagined would come from Ron’s mouth, accompanied by a big, hearty laugh.

Instead, Ron said, “No kidding! She
actually
came? I never thought she’d have the guts to defy her parents. I guess you’d better come over. I have some explaining to do.”

Matt certainly
would
come to Ron’s house. Kortville Construction only hired employees who’d proven they were capable of and willing to provide hard work. This bombshell blonde didn’t have a single callus on her soft hands and was wearing fashion boots that would blister her feet before her lunch break.

Veronica sauntered out of the building toward him. She looked from Matt to his truck with the Kortville Construction logo emblazoned on the door, and her mouth formed a tiny
O
of surprise. Apparently, she hadn’t made the connection until now.

He searched for her car, but only a twenty-year-old Oldsmobile and Barney’s rusted Blazer were in the lot. She must have had some driver drop her off. “If your guy already left, you can ride to Ron’s with me.”

“I’ll follow you.” She walked to the olive-colored Olds and got in.

Now Matt was surprised. His ex-girlfriend had taught him enough about expensive fashions that he could spot high class a mile away. This woman had high class—and high maintenance—written all over her. Yet, she was driving a car that was worth less than her high-heeled boots.

He made sure she stayed in his rearview mirror as he drove past his office and the diner. Then he signaled and turned left down Main Street. On one side was the bank and Laundromat with six washers and five quarter-eating dryers. The post office, hardware, and grocery stores all shared the same brick storefront on the other side of the street. Matt waved to Wilbur and Agatha Hollister, sitting on their usual bench out front, watching the cars go by. He chuckled, thinking of how they’d probably spend the rest of the afternoon debating the identity of the person driving the car behind him.

He turned again at the police and volunteer fire station, then drove past the library—which reminded him he’d forgotten to return Jenny’s book; he knew if he didn’t turn it in by tonight, Mrs. Parker would be stopping by his house to demand it in person.

When he stopped on the street in front of Ron’s house, Veronica pulled around him into the driveway. They reached the front door at the same time.

“Thank you for your help.” She smiled at him as she pushed the doorbell. “I can take it from here.”

Matt didn’t move. He wasn’t leaving until Ron assured him he’d check out the references Veronica had provided for her previous construction work.

Ron opened the door, shuffling a little as he always did with his bad leg.

“Grandfather.” Veronica glided toward him with her arms outstretched for a hug.

“Grandfather?” He looked shocked as he stood awkwardly in her embrace. “I was never a grandpa to you.”

“But now that’s all going to change.” She beamed at Ron. “Thank you for bringing me here and giving me this opportunity. I can’t wait to make up for lost time.”

He cleared his throat, looking distinctly uncomfortable. “Why don’t you just call me Ron?”

“Of-of course. That makes more sense until we get to know each other better.” She dropped her arms and stepped back.

Matt wasn’t a guy prone to hugging every stranger who came his way, but even he recoiled at Ron’s cold reception. Ron had invited her here, yet his attitude clearly proclaimed he didn’t want any of the things Veronica expected from her visit. Their lack of grandfather-granddaughter relationship wasn’t Matt’s problem, though—in fact, it proved that Ron had no intention of setting this woman up to work for Matt’s company. He was home free. “If you’re just having a family reunion, I’ll leave you two alone. Nice to meet you, Veronica.”

“She came here to work for you,” Ron told him.

Matt gritted his teeth in frustration. “I’d like to check her references from her previous employer before we make a decision.”

“She wants to work construction, and I want to hire my granddaughter,” Ron said. “So she’s hired.”

This was ridiculous. The woman had probably never held a hammer in her life. Matt, for one, had better things to do than teach her how.

Veronica turned and faced him. “I might not have done hands-on construction before, but I’ve been studying what you do. I can quickly put it to practical use.”

Matt raised an eyebrow at Ron. Surely he would reconsider his foolish decision.

“Thirty days. That’s all I’m asking,” Ron said. “I’ve sat quietly by and let you run things the way you’ve seen fit. But I have a fifty percent ownership stake, and I’m exercising my voice. This is your new employee for the next month, unless she decides to return to her parents before then.”

“Which I won’t,” Veronica asserted.

Right.

“She’s proving herself to me,” Ron explained. “Then I’ll let her run my distribution warehouse out by the interstate.”

And it was okay to use Matt’s life as practice? He tried to rein in his anger. “I thought you were selling that and retiring.”

“I
am
retiring. I’d planned to give it to my daughter before she ran off with that fancy city man. Now I have another chance to pass it down to my family instead of selling.”

After he’s promised a share of the sale’s proceeds to every needy cause in town?
Furious beyond the ability to speak rationally, Matt gritted out, “I’m going back to work.”

Ron wouldn’t renege on his promise to Kortville, because Veronica was never going to last the thirty days working for him. Matt knew her type, and he knew she wasn’t cut out for small-town living
or
construction work. As long as Veronica Jamison was around him, she would have both—in spades.


“So, you’ll work for him,” Ron announced as Matt stalked to his truck.

Veronica watched him slam the door and spin his tires as he sped off. For the first time, she felt a sense of trepidation about the decision she’d made. “I don’t think he’s happy about it.”

“He’ll come around. I’ll give you his number, so you can contact him to work out the details.”

If only Grandfather—Ron, she corrected—had explained to Matt ahead of time that she was coming. She’d assumed the other owner of the construction company was agreeable to the decision to hire her, and a friendly welcome would have gone a long way toward calming her nerves. She punched Matt’s number into her phone and then slipped it back in her purse. “Why don’t I unpack and get settled? I’ll talk to him after he’s had a couple hours to get used to the idea.”

“Brilliant plan.” Ron gave a nod of approval and put his hand on the door, as if he was about to close it.

“Do you want to show me around before I bring in my suitcase, or is there another door that’s closer to my room?”

“What? You’re not staying here.”

“I’m not?” He’d invited her to come for a month. She tried to remember the exact phrasing of the e-mail. Maybe he hadn’t
explicitly
used the words
stay in my house
, but they’d certainly been implied…

“Absolutely not.” He seemed extremely uncomfortable by the notion. “I’m an old man; I’ve lived alone for nearly thirty years. I have one bathroom in this house, and I don’t want any of your frivolous lotions cluttering it up.”

“I’ll be careful not to leave anything behind.” Her grandfather had appeared much more welcoming when she’d first e-mailed him for advice about leaving her parents’ home—he’d immediately offered her a job and a place to stay. Maybe he wasn’t as open when it came to face-to-face meetings, but with a little time, she knew she could get him to warm up, and then they could make up for all the years they’d never had together.

“I don’t want you in there at all. I’m seventy-eight years old. When I have to go, I have to go. If you’d followed my directions to the trailer, you’d know you already have a place. You can stay there for as long as you’re in town.”

“That trailer? You mean the address wasn’t a mistake?”

“Of course not.” He sounded offended. “My body might be falling apart, but there’s nothing wrong with my mind.”

Panic fluttered in her stomach. She’d been prepared to make sacrifices, like sharing a bathroom. But moving into the only home in a run-down, practically condemned trailer park sounded downright dangerous. “I…I’d really rather stay with you.”

“I went out of my way to provide you with this very generous offer. You can take it or leave it,” Ron told her.

Veronica squared her shoulders. She knew she couldn’t spend her entire life living with family. She was an adult, after all, and if she wanted to be treated like one, she needed to live like one. “D-do you have a key for me?”

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